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Dr. Nayan Barbade
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Dr. Nayan Barbade

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Dr. Nayan Barbade
As a Medical Officer
Doctor information
Experience:
6 years
Education:
SMBT ISM and RC Nashik
Academic degree:
MBBS (Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery)
Area of specialization:
I am trained to work across both operation theaters and critical care setups, and my focus keeps shifting depending on where the patient needs me most. Airway management and intubation are part of my daily practice, sometimes routine, sometimes in high-stress emergencys where seconds make a diffrence. I handle both general and regional anesthesia, making sure patients are stable before, during and after surgeries. In ICU I follow strict protocols but also adapt fast when unexpected changes happen. Central line insertion, arterial access, ventilator management, and ABG interpretation are skills I use often, and they keep me alert to even small shifts in a patients condition. I am certified in BLS, ACLS and ATLS which helps me support emergencies not only in hospital wards but also in sudden trauma or cardiac situations. Perioperative monitoring is another area I work closely on, guiding patients safely through the surgical process and watching for hidden risk factors. Emergency medicine support also forms a big part of my role, from stabilising critical patients to coordinating care with other specialists. Beyond anesthesia and ICU care I also give attention to long-term issues like hypertension and diabetes management. These chronic conditions often complicate surgery and recovery, so addressing them early makes a huge difference in outcomes. Over time I realised that balancing acute interventions with preventive medicine is what makes care more complete. My work may sound technical, but for me its always about keeping the patient safe and supported, whether in critical care, operation theatre, or long term follow up.
Achievements:
I am proud of my academic path that shaped how I practice today. I completed my MBBS from SMBT Institute of Medical Sciences & Research Centre, under Maharashtra University of Health Sciences, which gave me the first strong base to handle real patient care. Later I did my Diploma in Anesthesiology from NBEMS, and those years taught me how to stay calm under pressure, managing airway, anesthesia and critical situations where mistakes are not allowed. Wanting to broaden my knowledge further, I went on for Fellowship in Internal Medicine at Medvarsity (Apollo Hospitals Education). That helped me bridge the gap between acute care in OT and long term management of patients with chronic illness. Each of these milestones added diff skills and perspective, making me more confident in treating patients whether in surgery, ICU or medical wards.

I am a doctor who took my path step by step, each stage teaching me something new about medicine and about myself. My journey started with MBBS from SMBT Institute of Medical Sciences & Research Centre, Nashik under Maharashtra University of Health Sciences. Those years were rough and full of late nights but also gave me strong foundation in understanding patients, not just textbooks. Later I went on to complete Diploma in Anesthesiology from NBEMS, and that training was very intense. Working in OT, managing critical cases, learning how to make quick yet safe decisions… it showed me how much responsibility this field carry. Sometimes I still think about the first time I handled a high-risk case and how my hands were shaking but the knowledge kept me steady. After that I pursued Fellowship in Internal Medicine from Medvarsity (Apollo Hospitals Education). It widened my scope, allowing me to go beyond operation theatres and manage patients with chronic illnesses, metabolic disorders, and multi-system conditions. The combination of anesthesiology and internal medicine training made me more balanced in approach – like understanding both acute care and long term management. Right now I try to integrate everything, whether its about perioperative care, critical management or general medical issues. I like to keep my work logical and patient-centered, explaining things in simple way, not hiding behind jargon. Over the years I learnt that medicine is not just about curing but also about listening, guiding and sometimes just being present when someone is scared about their health. Maybe my path is still in progress, but each step so far—MBBS, Diploma in Anesthesia, Fellowship in Internal Medicine—has shaped me into a clinician who respects science but also the human side of healing. And that’s the part of my work I value most, even when the days feel too long or the cases too hard.